Shell lets contract for upgrade of Moerdijk ethylene complex

Royal Dutch Shell Plc has let a contract to TechnipFMC PLC to provide engineering, procurement, and module fabrication (EPF) for proprietary equipment and related services for eight ethylene furnaces at Shell Nederland Chemie BV’s 971,000-tonnes/year Moerdijk petrochemicals complex in the Netherlands.

 

Based on TechnipFMC’s multi-lane radiant coil design, the new steam cracker furnaces will replace 16 older units to increase energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions at the complex without reducing capacity at the complex, the service provider said on the 30th September.

 

The furnaces will be shipped to the site in modules, enabling the cracker to maintain continuous operation throughout the upgrading project, according to TechnipFMC.

 

The new steam cracker furnaces are anticipated to reduce the Moerdijk complex’s carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by about 10%.

 

TechnipFMC – which did not disclose a timeframe for its work on the project – valued the EPF contract at between US$75-250 million.

 

Shell’s investment in the furnace revamp at Moerdijk comes as part of the operator’s ambition to become a net-zero emissions energy business by 2050 or sooner, said Thomas Casparie, executive vice-president of Shell’s global chemicals business, on the 4th September.

 

Shell said it expects work on the Moerdijk upgrading project to be completed in 2025.

 

Source: Oil & Gas Journal